Prohepcidin in maternal circulation: is it related to spontaneous preterm labor?

Authors: YÜKSEL ONARAN, ESRA AKTEPE KESKİN, ZEHRA CANDAN İLTEMİR DUVAN, SERAP AYNUR SİMAVLI, CEMİLE KOCA, HASAN KAFALI, NİLGÜN TURHAN

Abstract: To investigate whether spontaneous preterm labor (PTL) with intact membranes is associated with changes in maternal serum prohepcidin concentrations. Materials and methods: The study consisted of patients with spontaneous PTL with intact membranes (n = 25), a control group of healthy pregnant women between the 24th and 37th gestational weeks (n = 22), and uncomplicated term pregnancies in spontaneous labor (n = 19). Blood samples were collected from patients at the time of clinical diagnosis. Levels of prohepcidin, hemoglobin, serum ferritin, serum iron, unsaturated iron binding capacity, total iron binding capacity, transferrin and transferrin saturation, C reactive protein, and interleukin-6 were measured. Results: Patients with spontaneous PTL had significantly lower maternal serum prohepcidin concentrations than term delivery and control subjects. Conclusion: Maternal serum prohepcidin concentration is lower in patients with spontaneous PTL compared to term delivery and control subjects. This suggests that measuring maternal serum prohepcidin concentrations in PTL may be a feasible method for understanding etiologic causes of spontaneous preterm delivery, but, before suggesting this as a course of action, low levels of prohepcidin in patients with PTL need to be more fully investigated.

Keywords: Spontaneous preterm labor, term pregnancy, prohepcidin

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